The Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL) is a comprehensive repository of e-texts in Sanskrit and other Indian languages.123 It contains several texts related to Indology, such as philosophical texts.4 Rather than scanned books or typeset PDF files, these texts are in plain text, in a variety of encodings, and are machine-readable, so that (for instance) word search can be performed on them.15 It was started by Reinhold Grünendahl,6 with the intention of being a "cumulative register of the numerous download sites for electronic texts in Indian languages".5 It is used by many scholars; for instance, David Smith writes: "Sanskritists are enormously indebted to this incomparably useful site and to those who have contributed e-texts to it."7
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- Huet, Gérard; Kulkarni, Amba; Scharf, Peter (2009), Sanskrit Computational Linguistics: First and Second International Symposia Rocquencourt, France, October 29–31, 2007 Providence, RI, USA, May 15–17, 2008, Revised Selected Papers, Springer, p. 5, ISBN 978-3-642-00154-3, retrieved 18 June 2010 – via Google Books
- Ayres, Alyssa; Oldenburg, Philip, eds. (2005), India briefing: takeoff at last?, M.E. Sharpe, p. 208, ISBN 978-0-7656-1592-3 – via Google Books
- N., Rama; Lakshmanan, Meenakshi (October 2009). "A New Computational Schema for Euphonic Conjunctions in Sanskrit Processing" (Journal (Paginated)). Retrieved 2010-06-18.
- Ganeri, Jonardon (2007), The concealed art of the soul: theories of self and practices of truth in Indian ethics and epistemology, Oxford University Press, p. 237, ISBN 978-0-19-920241-6 – via Google Books
- "GRETIL - Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages: Introduction". Archived from the original on 2010-06-29. Retrieved 2010-06-18.
- Bechert, Heinz; Wille, Klaus, eds. (1965), Sanskrithandschriften aus den Turfanfunden, Volume 9, Franz Steiner Verlag, ISBN 978-3-515-07346-2 – via Google Books
- Smith, David (2010). "Beauty and Words Relating to Beauty in the Ramayana, the Kavyas of Asvaghosa, and Kalidasa's Kumarasambhava". The Journal of Hindu Studies. 3 (1): 36.